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Geek Challenge [SKRZAT] (Base Minus Two)

Geek Challenge [SKRZAT] (Base Minus Two)

Geek Challenge \[SKRZAT\] is an \textbf{old}, \textbf{old} game from Poland that uses a game console with two buttons plus a joy stick. As is true to its name, the game communicates in binary, so that one button represents a zero and the other a one. Even more true to its name, the game chooses to communicate so that the base of the number system is \textbf{minus two}, not plus two, so we’ll call this representation "Weird Binary". Thus the bit positions label the powers of \textbf{minus two}, as seen in the following five-bit tables: \includegraphics{https://static.e-olymp.com/content/35/356bc4e15f403f9d1b079a8fb8420975ca83cb2b.jpg} Numbers are presented on the screen in Weird Binary, and then numbers are accepted in response from the console as a stream of zeroes and ones, terminated by a five-second pause. You are writing a computer program to support the novice geek in playing the game by translating numbers between decimal and Weird Binary. \InputFile The first line in the file gives the number of problems being posed without any white space. Following are that many lines. Each line will either be a conversion into Weird Binary or out of Weird Binary: the letter "\textbf{b}" indicates that the rest of the line is written in Weird Binary and needs to be converted to decimal; the letter "\textbf{d}" indicates that the rest of the line is written in decimal and needs to be converted to Weird Binary. The input data are in the range to fit within a \textbf{15}-bit Weird Binary number, which represents the decimal number range \textbf{--10922} to \textbf{21845}, inclusive. \OutputFile For each conversion problem, show the type of problem, its input string, and the converted result in the format shown below, replicating even the spacing exactly as shown. Leading zeroes are not allowed.
Time limit 1 second
Memory limit 64 MiB
Input example #1
10
b 1001101
b 0111111
b 101001000100001
b 010010001000010
b 100110100110100
d -137
d 137
d 8191
d -10000
d 21000
Output example #1
From binary: 1001101 is 61
From binary: 0111111 is -21
From binary: 101001000100001 is 19937
From binary: 010010001000010 is -7106
From binary: 100110100110100 is 15604
From decimal: -137 is 10001011
From decimal: 137 is 110011001
From decimal: 8191 is 110000000000011
From decimal: -10000 is 10100100110000
From decimal: 21000 is 101011000011000